Down by the river

Up early and the view from my window silver with mist and the faint green outline of hills barely visible –dressed for walking and rambled around the grey streets of the deserted market town before climbing down to the paths alongside the Wye, shining and rippling like a rumpled satin bedspread. Birds very loud in the woodland — I was dismayed to see the invasive Japanese knotweed higher than my head and flowering with small pea-blue orchid blossoms.

 

As I walked along I wasn’t paying attention to what was around me as I usually try to do. I was at time plotting fiction, the rhythmn of dialogue matching the beat of my walk, and I was composing a long post on not being superficial. When I realised that the point of it was to prove how unsuperficial I myself am, I stopped and watched hoverflies over white bramble flowers.

 

All the same I do wonder about those who get their psychology from Oprah and Dr Phil rather than Melanie Klein. Those who have never read Sissela Bok on lying. That lure of the easy and popular. I can see it in myself and my love of glossy gardening books with full-colour images of English country gardens, manicured and colour-themed, so much more enticing to read than DIY books on gardening or botany textbooks. When I have to try and reproduce the glossy images in my own garden, I need the gritty knowhow. The superficial never gets you there –

 

Both S and myself worrying about a friend who wasn’t at a meeting last week and hasn’t called at all. Nearly three years sober and doing well, so it might be fine. But there is a tiny cold dread in us as the silence from him continues.

 

Hot and cloudy morning — going back to the battle with fiction and intermittently thinking about my duck breasts with orange sauce, tonight’s supper. Each time I retrun to the story I am trying to write I begin yawning and a delicious sleepiness creeps over me. Resistance takes many forms.

Walking at dawn

About to put on my walking shoes again and head out. Sun coming up over the hills fast. Yesterday I went up along the road leading into town, quickly around the Butter Market (had the WI reserve a bakewell tart and blueberry pie), up the flights of stairs to the castle, down the cobbled road, along past Swan Inn and its deserted walled garden, past the alms houses, so freezing cold in winter, down the path to St Mary’s, over the wooden bridge through woodland, stopping to drink from the shelf of rock amid moss, an ancient spring, icy water an exlixir — the strong woodland smells of earth mould and flowering trees, curious black birds darting about. Home stretch and  time for coffee.

 

A great way to begin the day. Off I go again. Thinking about the tender vulnerable feeling of being in a new relationship, torn between self-protectiveness and reaching out, risking a little more each day. About growth and letting go of selfish fearful habits in community.

 

Learning to live. Each day a fresh beginning, the sense of renewal, taking up the realities of yesterday, working with the possibilities of tomorrow. Long day’s journey into night — the day ahead a thorny beautiful path to traverse.

 

And birds calling, sharp high cries demanding I get out there before the sun has burned off the mist. How impatient I am to make the most of my own life these days!